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Infographic: 33 Tips To Being A Better Writer

James Altucher is an American hedge fund manager, entrepreneur, bestselling author, and podcaster. He has founded or cofounded over 20 companies, including Reset Inc. and StockPickr and claims to have failed at 17 of them. He has published 11 books, and is a frequent contributor to publications including The Financial Times, TheStreet.com, TechCrunch, Seeking Alpha, Thought Catalog, and The Huffington Post. USA Today named his book “Choose Yourself” among the 12 Best Business Books of All Time. Altucher launched his blog, Altucher Confidential, in October 2010, and is consistently one of the best writers on creativity out there. Here, he shares his tips on how to become a better writer.

betterwriter

Via James Altcher

Patti Smith Lists Her Favourite Books

Patti Smith, singer-songwriter, poet and visual artist who became a highly influential component of the New York City punk rock movement with her 1975 debut album Horses and hasn’t ever looked back. She gave out a list of her favorite books at the Melbourne International Arts Festival a few years ago. And while we’ve all grown understandably wary of lists these days, any book on this list of Smith’s recommendations will open your mind in any number of new and unexpected ways.

“The Master & Margarita” by Mikhail Bulgakov
“Journey To The East” by Hermann Hesse
“The Glass Bead Game” by Hermann Hesse
“Heart Of Darkness” by Joseph Conrad
“Moby Dick” by Herman Melville
“Billy Budd” by Herman Melville
“Songs Of Innocence” by William Blake
“The Wild Boys” by William Burroughs
“Howl” by Allen Ginsburg
“A Season In Hell” by Arthur Rimbaud
“Illuminations” by Arthur Rimbaud
“Wittgenstein’s Poker” by David Edmonds & John Eidinow
“Villette” by Charlotte Bronte
“The Process” by Brion Gysin
“Cain’s Book” by Alexander Trocchi
“Coriolanus” by William Shakespeare
“The Happy Prince” by Oscar Wilde
“The Sheltering Sky” by Paul Bowles
“Against Interpretation” by Susan Sontag
“The Oblivian Seekers” by Isabelle Eberhardt
“Women Of Cairo” by Gerard de Nerval
“Under The Volcano” by Malcom Lowery
“Dead Souls” by Nikolai Gogol
“The Book Of Disquiet” by Fernando Pessoa
“Death Of Virgil” by Herman Broch
“Raise High The Roof Beams Carpenter/ Franny & Zooey” by J.D. Salinger
“The Scarlet Letter” by Nathaniel Hawthorne
“A Night Of Serious Drinking” by Rene Daumal
“Swann In Love” by Marcel Proust
“A Happy Death” by Albert Camus
“The First Man” by Albert Camus
“The Waves” by Virginia Woolf
“Big Sur” by Jack Kerouac
anything by H.P. Lovecraft
anything by W.G. Sebald
“The Thief’s Journal” or anything by Jean Genet
“The Arcades Project” or anything by Walter Benjamin
“A Poet In New York” by Garcia Lorca
“The Lost Honor Of Katharina Blum” by Heinrich Boll
“The Palm Wine Drinkard” by Amos Tutuola
“Ice” by Anna Kavan (or anything by her)
“The Divine Proportion” by H.E. Huntley
“Nadja” by Andre Breton

Ronnie Wood and Genesis Publications Announce the 2015 Release ‘How Can It Be? A Rock and Roll Diary’

ublished this May 2015: Genesis Publications announces a new, signed limited edition book by Ronnie Wood: ‘How Can It Be? A Rock & Roll Diary.’
Ten years before he joined the Rolling Stones, Ronnie Wood’s musical apprenticeship with The Birds catapulted him onto the stage of swinging London’s music scene, aged just 17.
Featuring a cast of characters including Jeff Beck, Pete Townshend, Eric Clapton, Keith Moon, Marianne Faithfull and many more, the story of Ronnie’s adventures was handwritten in his 1965 diary. Inspired by its discovery 50 years later, Ronnie Wood presents his journal for the first time, plus much more in a major new book for 2015.
“I suppose my own private world is in the diary,” says Wood.
Ronnie Wood’s 1965 handwritten diary has been produced in facsimile, down to its scuffs and scratches. Ronnie Wood reflects on the words he wrote 50 years ago and shares his memories in an extensive new manuscript.
He is creating a series of original and exclusive artworks to illustrate his words throughout the book. ‘How Can It Be? A Rock & Roll Diary’ also uncovers rare and unseen photographs and ephemera.
 “This diary shows what an amazing schedule I had,” exclaims Wood. “We’d be travelling the length and breadth of the country every day. With youth on our side, it was a continuing adventure. Our overspilling energy was enough to take care of work every night of the week. It was enough to chase the girls, enough to write songs, enough to rehearse and enough to travel. It was all go, all the time.” 
Released in a limited edition of just 1965 copies, each book is signed by Ronnie Wood. Available to pre-order now fromwww.RonnieWoodBook.com
MEDIA CONTACT: Elizabeth Freund 718-522-5858, Elizabeth@Beautifuldaymedia.com

The HUGE Actors who auditioned for The Office roles of Dwight, Michael, Kevin, Pam and Jim will blow your mind

Imagine how different the world of television would be if someone else played Jim, Dwight, or Pam in “The Office.” You’ll be surprised at how many huge, huge names auditioned for those roles.

Heavy metal with just one note

One note is all you need. Introducing Rob Scallon’s 00000.

How to make a microphone with just a matchbox and a pencil

Make a microphone out of a matchbox and pencil leads. Listen to sounds and music from the other side of the house using this DIY microphone. You’ll also need a battery, some wires and clips, and a pair of headphones or a speaker. What a fun and simple science experiment, and great to do with kids.

On April 17, Join Me As #WeAreSilent

On April 17, join Free The Children’s Craig Kielburger, Malala Yousafzai, and myself, among hundreds of thousands of others, as we go silent for 24 hours for the millions of girls around the world facing poverty, exploitation and the denial of their right to education.

Take your own vow of silence for an issue you care about and let your silence roar by spreading the word on social media using the hashtag #WeAreSilent.

“We realize the importance of our voices only when we are silenced.” — Malala Yousafzai

Canadian Arts/Media Job Posts For April 10, 2015

VICE Media is seeking a Music Supervisor who is responsible for placing and licensing all of the music used within all VICE-owned properties and all VICE-produced content across digital and linear properties.

Vanguarde Artists Management is one of Canada’s top agencies representing writers, directors, and other creative categories in the Film and TV industry. They have an opening for an Executive Assistant to Owner.

The Royal Conservatory is one of the largest and most respected music education institutions in the world, providing the definitive standard of excellence in curriculum design, assessment, performance training, teacher certification and arts-based social programs. They are looking for an Editor working both independently and collaboratively in the team-based environment of the Publishing department.

Gatwitch Records in Toronto is looking for a Label Manager, Coordinator.

EA Sports is looking for an Associate Live Producer at EA Vancouver working closely with the production and design team on identifying and creating live content that the EA Sports customer longs for.

TIFF, a vibrant not-for-profit arts organization, is accepting applications for the contract position of Assistant, Industry Registration (2 Positions).

TIFF, a vibrant not-for-profit arts organization, is accepting applications for the contract position of Registration and Submissions Assistant, Industry Office.

TIFF, a vibrant not-for-profit arts organization, is accepting applications for, the contract position of Coordinator to CEO, Executive Office.

TIFF, a vibrant not-for-profit arts organization, is accepting applications for the position of Stewardship Intern (2 Positions).

The Canadian Museum for Human Rights (CMHR) is the first museum in the world solely dedicated to the evolution, celebration and future of human rights. They are seeking talented individuals who are motivated to share their passion and commitment to join their team.

As the Province’s heritage agency, the Ontario Heritage Trust is dedicated to preserving, protecting and promoting Ontario’s rich and diverse heritage. They are looking for a Coordinator to oversee the effective delivery of the interpretation, programs, operations, partnership and oversight functions of the Trust’s cultural heritage sites in Eastern Ontario, particularly Fulford Place (Brockville) and Homewood (Maitland) as well as some responsibilities for the Trust’s interests between Kingston and the Quebec border.

The Regent Park Film Festival is currently accepting applications for the position of Programmer for the 2015 festival. We are looking for an experienced individual who has demonstrated strengths in media arts programming, is knowledgeable in inner city issues and has knowledge and/or experience with not-for-profit organizations.

War Child is seeking a highly motivated, organized and enthusiastic individual to assist the Corporate & Community Engagement department with their fundraising activities, with a primary focus on events, celebrity and corporate outreach and research.

The Weather Network has an opportunity for an Live Voice Closed Captionist, an On-call basis in Oakville.

CHEK News in Vancouver is seeking a polished senior news anchor / executive producer to take the helm of its flagship newscast.

Newcap Television is looking to hire a Television Sports Anchor/Reporter/ Videographer in Lloydminster.

Extreme Reach is the subject matter expert for all things Video, Audio and Digital; from post production to delivery. They are looking for a Video Tape Operator based in Toronto.

The Editors’ Association of Canada promotes professional editing as key in producing effective communication, and they are looking for an Executive Director.

Looking to break into the publishing industry? Kenilworth Media Inc. is growing and they are looking for an enthusiastic and skilled writer to join the editorial team on two of North America’s leading construction publications.

Are you interested in bringing your exceptional print and on-line writing skills and experience to Toronto’s leading alternative News and Entertainment weekly? NOW Magazine has an opening for a News Writer to contribute and help shape NOW’s editorial voice both in print and on-line. The News Writer will be responsible for delivering informative, challenging and high quality editorial content and stories on a daily basis.

The Wall Street Journal is looking for an experienced reporter to cover Canada’s central bank and the Canadian economy.

Metro is looking for an experienced reporter with the tenacity to push official sources and the skill to write compelling stories for readers in Ottawa.

Regina Leader-Post is looking to hire a temporary full-time Journalist for their Regina newsroom for a six (6) month term. Postmedia News is introducing a quartet of freshly designed information products – mobile, web, tablet and print – each with a unique voice and differentiated content that plays to the strengths of each platform. They’re looking for an energetic, ideas-infused journalist with the capacity to be a key contributor to all four.

windsoriteDOTca News – Windsor’s premier all-local, online, neighbourhood newspaper is looking for a Part-time News Reporter to join its passionate, ambitious, accomplished team to become part of a profitable, growing company where employees master their creativity and create a track record of success.

Emed International Medical Ltd, is looking for a Social Media Marketing Person.

CARFAC Ontario is the association of professional visual and media artists. They’re looking for an Executive Director, as chief executive officer responsible to the Board of Directors (the “Board”) for the administration and enforcement of the bylaws of CARFAC Ontario, execution of the Board’s policy and administrative directives, and for planning, organizing, coordinating and managing the operation of CARFAC Ontario’s programs and services compatible with pertinent legislation and within the approved annual operating plan and budget.

Your knowledge of event production – logistics, safety, security, signage, and more – is vast and will drive your success when you join the City of Toronto in this challenging role of City Cultural Events Production Coordinator.

Culture Days is a pan-Canadian volunteer-driven, grassroots arts and cultural participation movement and annual event led by arts-lovers, cultural aficionados and the arts and cultural sector in collaboration with municipalities, public funding agencies, provincial governments, the private sector and the media. They are seeking a Bilingual Community Engagement Assistant.

The City of Toronto has an opening for a Supervisor, Special Events (Programming Portfolio), responsible for implementing the programming vision and strategies for specific special events and festivals and the Division as a whole. The current events include Doors Open Toronto, Summer in the Squares, Canada Day, Cavalcade of Lights and Scotiabank Nuit Blanche.

TIFF, a vibrant not-for-profit arts organization, announces a Festival Staff Recruitment Fair to recruit new FESTIVAL VENUE REPRESENTATIVES, TICKETING SERVICES STAFF, MEMBERSHIP REPRESENTATIVES, RETAIL REPRESENTATIVES, TIFF BELL LIGHTBOX CONCESSIONS ATTENDANTS, TIFF BELL LIGHTBOX CINEMAS REPRESENTATIVES.

Guelph Jazz Festival is a unique music festival with a distinctive flair for the adventurous, and they have an opening for a Managing Director.

Newmarket Jazz Festival will be Aug 2, 3, 4 – is run by non-profit organization – Arts Music Festivals York Region and managed by St. Kitts Music – Sher & George St. Kitts. They are looking for a team of reliable Interns who are team players with good communication skills and a passion for the arts & music to assist at the festival.

Rick Rubin Annotates Some of His Classic Work on Rap Genius

After changing music, oh, about five or six times, by working with The Beastie Boys, JJ Cool J, and Johnny Cash, Rick Rubin hit Genius to share the wisdom he’s gathered in his 30-plus years of producing. He annotated some of the classic songs he’s produced on—from Jay Z to Kanye West—as well as work he’s simply a fan of.  You can tell he’s still a big music fan, drawing on memories of his start, and what he’s listening to now.

You can check out all of his annotations here, and here are a few to obsess over.

On Kanye West’s “Only One” feat. Paul McCartney:

I was in St. Barths two days before the single came out. Kanye said, “I’m thinking about putting out ‘Only One’ tomorrow at midnight.” I said, “Should we mix it?” He was like, “It hasn’t really changed — it’s pretty much what it was.” I hadn’t heard it in almost two months, so I asked him to send it to me, and he did. And I said, “I think this can sound better than it does.” We never really finished it finished it.

So we called all the engineers — and I’m trying to get all this to happen all remotely — and we got maybe three different engineers. This is the day before New Year’s Eve, and we’re all finding studio time, getting the files. Then they all start sending me mixes. I thought one was better than the others, and Kanye agreed. One guy mastered it, because it was due, and they turned it in. I had another guy master it, and it was better, but it was already too late. I think it switched the following morning. It was in real time! Like as soon as it was better, we had to switch it.

That’s how it works in Kanye world. It used to really give me anxiety, but now I just know that’s what it is. That’s how he likes to work.

…Kanye is a combination of careful and spontaneous. He’ll find a theme he likes quickly, and then live with that for a while, not necessarily filling in all the words until later. At the end, he’ll fill in all the gaps.

He was upset at one point when I said that he wrote the lyrics quickly. He’s right — they percolate for a long time, he gets the phrasing into his brain, lives with it, and then lines come up. It definitely starts from this very spontaneous thing.

On “Only One,” a lot of those lyrics came out free-form, ad-libs. The song is essentially live, written in the moment. Some of the words were later improved, but most of it was stream of consciousness, just Kanye being in the moment.

On Jay Z’s “99 Problems”:

Jay came into my studio every day for like a week, I kept trying things that I thought would sound like a Jay record, and after like three or four days he said, “I want to do something more like one of your old records, Beastie Boys-style.” Originally that’s not what I was thinking for him, but he requested that vibe, and we just started working on some tracks.

Musically, there were a couple of different ideas that [engineer] Jason [Lader] and I were working on independently that we played back together, and the way the beats overlapped was really interesting. It wasn’t planned out, it was more experimenting.

There was a part where it really sounded crazy and the beats were fighting each other. Jason was operating the Pro-Tools, and I’m saying “Move to the left, move to the right, try this beat, add this, do this,” and then he makes it do it. There’s nothing live on the track.

It’s a combination of three samples — “The Big Beat” by Billy Squier, “Long Red” by Mountain, and “Get Me Back On Time” by Wilson Pickett — and two programmed beats coming in and out.

On James Blake’s “Retrograde”:

There are so many records now where it’s about really, really heavy sub-bass, maybe a hi-hat, and just a voice.

I think a lot of it is the James Blake influence. I feel like he’s really influenced everybody a lot. I know in the artist community everybody loves Blake. James Blake is spectacular, I love him all the time. Live, he’s even better than on record.

On LL Cool J’s “Rock the Bells”:

It was never about proving anything, it was just that this is what I like and this is true to who they are. The only reason those first records were so aggressive, it had little to do with me. That was the good music at that moment. It wasn’t because it was that, it was the music. If the best music in that moment was folk music, that’s probably what I would have done first. I mean, I like all kinds of music, I always have, I’ve always listened to all kinds of music.

On Dr. Dre’s “Nuthin’ But a G Thang”:

I never really listened to The Chronic. I guess I never liked smooth? Same with Puff, who really brought R&B into it. I preferred hip-hop when it was nothing like R&B. I love breakbeats and B-boy style drum machines. I never liked the slick stuff.

On Kanye West’s “Bound 2”:

Something we talked about with Kanye was doing an alternate version of Yeezus,because there are so many versions of songs, great versions. There are versions just as good as what’s on the album, just different. I know as a fan of the album, I’d like to hear that. Maybe some day, whenever he wants. But it exists! That shit exists.

… “Bound 2” was a track that initially wasn’t a sample-based track. It was a band track with singing, no idea who. I got involved late in the game. 

He came in one day and said he got inspired driving up the Pacific Coast Highway, on the way to my studio. He thought it would be a good thing to try the sample he found, so we tried that and the whole song changed. The chorus was still the old way, where it was sort of a band version. I took everything out of that and reduced it to one sort of ugly sounding synth. I would say the old version was more like MOR, R&B. That’s just an example of one song on Yeezus that changed a lot. Some of them changed a little, some of them changed a lot.

On Kanye West’s “Blood on the Leaves”:

I think he worked mostly out of an apartment in Paris, but I don’t really know the details, I never went there. I do know that it was a large space, because you could hear the reverb of the space in a lot of the tracks even when you didn’t want it. I think he liked the vibe there more than thinking it was a good place to make a good-sounding recording.

On Kanye West’s “I Am a God”:

When he played Yeezus for me, it was like, three hours of stuff. We just went through it and figured out what was essential and what wasn’t. It was like deciding a point of view, and it was really his decision to make it minimal.

He kept saying it about tracks that he thought weren’t good enough and needed work. If he was going to leave me to work on stuff, he’d say, “Anything you can do to take stuff out instead of put stuff in, let’s do that.”

On Kanye West’s “Black Skinhead”:

Kanye played at some festival after the release of Yeezus, and his whole rant was something to the effect of “I turn on the radio and nothing speaks to me, and I don’t want to have anything to do with it, and I don’t want my music on the radio because I don’t like what the radio is.” So in that mindset, it makes sense that he makes a record that isn’t for that. It’s not about that. It’s so anti. It’s almost anti-hip-hop. It’s crazy.

On the Beastie Boys’ “Girls”:

Adam Horovitz and I wrote “Girls” on a train. We trained down to DC to record with the Junkyard Band, this band of kids who played D.C. go-go on garbage cans. We put out a Junkyard Band single on Def Jam.

On the train back, we wrote “Girls”. It was rooted in an Isley Brothers song, “Shout.” It was written with that music in mind and then we sort of did our version of what that would have been. We just wrote really stupid, offensive words.

That time Derry Grehan from Honeymoon Suite did a Pepsi commercial

A 1986 Pepsi Canada commercial featuring Derry Grehan from Honeymoon Suite with a rather unique method of opening pop bottles.